A
big selling point of smartphones is their ability to hold much of your
data -- photos, videos, your entire music library -- on a little device.
But
over the years, their storage capabilities, usually no more than 64 GB,
haven't kept pace with all the movies, games, apps and other
memory-hogging minutiae of modern digital life.
Many people keep stuff in the cloud, but that requires Wi-Fi access.
It's
frustrating to have to delete music or videos every time you want to
store something new on your phone. But thanks to some advances in memory
design and construction, we may be about to expand our devices in a big
way.
Techmania
Techmania
At Rice University, a team led by chemist James Tour has developed a breakthrough in
RRAM (resistive random-access memory) technology. Their RRAM uses
silicon oxide, one of the most studied and abundant substances on Earth,
the stuff of sand and glass.
"Because
it's this amazing material, the industry understands it," Tour said,
noting that the key to the scalability of the design is industrial
availability. Indeed, Rice's RRAM can be manufactured at room
temperature and relatively lower voltages compared with other versions.
RRAM is the next step for an industry that's
finding the limits to flash memory. Like flash, RRAM doesn't need
continuous power. But it's also much faster, since it can be built into
more versatile arrays and stacked into bigger pieces.
"You've
got to get into the third dimension to pack up enough density in the
memory" in order to keep the capabilities growing, Tour said. Flash
memory has kept up with Moore's Law -- the ever-increasing power of
microchips -- by giving more functionality to the devices on the chips,
he says.
But RRAM does a better and more efficient job.
"It's this insatiable desire for memory that's driving all this," he said.
Tour's
team is one of many working on the problem, though he believes his
approach has an edge because of its use of silicon oxide instead of more
exotic materials. Licensing is under way, he says, and prototypes will
be further test the concept's viability.
But if everything pans out, phones with a terabyte of memory -- that's 1,000 GB, enough to hold hundreds of feature-length movies -- are just the beginning, Tour says.
"Because
silicon oxide is glass and it's transparent, we've built these on
glass, we've built this on top of plastic, so it can even be part of the
coating you're looking at through the screen," he said.
Tour
believes it'll be a world like that portrayed in the movie "Minority
Report," with flexible, rollable digital "newspapers" and writable smart
windows.
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